AG Pushes for Involuntary Manslaughter Charges in PSU Pledge Death

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said his office has completed a comprehensive review of Timothy Piazza’s February 2017 death after a night of drinking at a Penn state fraternity house. Shapiro wants the most serious charges reinstated for some of the men allegedly involved.

(Published Tuesday, May 1, 2018)

Pennsylvania's attorney general wants a judge to reinstate involuntary manslaughter charges against five former Penn State fraternity members arrested in connection to a pledge's hazing-related death last year.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro said Tuesday that his office didn't agree with District Judge Allen Sinclair's decision to dismiss involuntary manslaughter charges against five former Beta Theta Pi fraternity members and demanded that a jury hear evidence and make that decision.

"That local magistrate should not have the final say,” Shapiro said at a news conference Tuesday morning.

Shapiro's office is overseeing the prosecution of more than a dozen men accused of playing a role in Piazza's death. The 19-year-old sophomore died of severe head and abdominal injuries after falling several times during an evening of hazing and drinking at the now-shuttered Beta Theta Pi fraternity house.

"I am committed to holding all individuals responsible for any role they played in the hazing death of Tim Piazza," said Shapiro, who was joined by Piazza's parents at the news conference.

Last week, Shapiro's office appealed the ruling and is seeking to have the charges reinstated "so that a jury of 12 men and women from that community can make the ultimate determination about the defendants accountability."

Shapiro said he was confident that the evidence against the five members he says should be charged with involuntary manslaughter will support a conviction by a jury. Each of the five helped set up "The Gauntlet" of drinking, were aware of his fall and refused to seek medical attention in a timely manner, Shapiro said.

Piazza later died at a hospital from severe head injuries that included a skull fracture and a shattered spleen that caused massive abdominal bleeding.

"When a parent sends their child off to college, they don’t expect them to be found at the bottom of a basement – unconscious and fatally injured," Shapiro tweeted Tuesday. "Tim’s death was a tragedy."